On wheeled vehicles with the common type of front wheel
steering (i.e. one, two or even four wheels at the front capable of steering), the vehicle's
turning diameter measures the minimum space needed to turn the vehicle around while the steering is set to its maximum displacement from the central 'straight ahead' position - i.e. either extreme left or right. If a marker pen were placed on the point of the vehicle furthest from the center of the turn, the diameter of the circle traced would be the vehicle's turning diameter. The
turning radius is half of the turning diameter. The curb-to-curb turning radius, which considers the chassis and wheels only without body protrusions, can be expressed as a simplified function of the
wheelbase, tire width, and
steering angle: :turning\ radius = \frac{wheelbase}{\sin{\left ( steering\ angle \right )}} + \frac{tire\ width}{2} Aircraft have a similar minimum turning circle concept, generally associated with a
standard rate turn, in which an aircraft enters a
coordinated turn which changes its heading at a rate of 3° per second, or 180° in one minute. In this case, the turning radius depends on the
true airspeed v_t (in knots) as: :turning\ radius = \frac{v_t}{60 \pi} Turning diameter is sometimes used in everyday language as a
generalized term rather than with
numerical figures. For example, a wheeled vehicle with a very small turning circle may be described as having a "tight turning radius", meaning that it is easier to turn around very tight corners. Wheeled vehicles with
four-wheel steering will have a smaller turning radius than vehicles that steer wheels on one axle.
Exceptions Technically, the minimum possible turning circle for a vehicle would be where it does not move either forwards or backwards while turning and simply
pivots on its central axis. For a rectangular vehicle capable of doing this, the smallest turning circle would be equal to the diagonal length of the vehicle. As an example, some boats can be turned in this way, generally by using
azimuth thrusters. Some wheeled vehicles are designed to
spin around their central axis by making all wheels steerable, such as certain
lawnmowers and
wheelchairs as they do not follow a circular path as they turn. In this case the vehicle is referred to as a "
zero turning radius" vehicle. Some
camera dollies used in the
film industry have a "round" mode which allows them to spin around their
z axis by allowing
synchronized inverse rotation of their left and right wheel sets, effectively giving them "zero" turning radius. Many conventionally steerable vehicles (only one axle with steerable wheels) can reverse the direction of travel in a space smaller than the stated turning radius by executing a specialized maneuver, such as a
J-turn or similar skid, or in a discontinuous motion such as a
three-point turn. == Alternative nomenclature ==